1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910494741803321

Autore

Roraback Erik S.

Titolo

The philosophical Baroque : on autopoietic modernities / / by Erik S. Roraback

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden, The Netherlands ; ; Boston, [Massachusetts] : , : Brill Rodopi, , 2017

©2017

ISBN

90-04-33985-X

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (311 pages) : illustrations

Collana

Literary Modernism, , 2405-9315 ; ; Volume 2

Disciplina

808.8032

Soggetti

Literature, Modern

Literature, Modern - Criticism and interpretation

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Preliminary Material -- Introduction: Re-Framing Modernity -- Luhmann and Autopoietic Forms of the (Neo) Baroque Modern: Or, Structure, System, and Contingency -- Folds of Desire’s (Dis)contents: Orson Welles, Lacan, and Shakespeare’s King Lear (c. 1606) -- The Monad of Deleuze’s Many-Tiered High Baroque Leibniz -- Folds of an Autopoietic and Unconscious Monad: Henry James, Benjamin, and Blanchot -- (Neo) Baroque Intersections: Finnegans Wake (1939), Gravity’s Rainbow (1973), and L’Écriture du désastre (The Writing of the Disaster) (1980) -- Neobaroque Fingerprints: Artistic Authority, Interpretation, and Economic Power/Un-power of Finnegans Wake -- Deleuze’s Le pli: Leibniz et le baroque (The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque) (1988) with Joyce’s “stohong baroque” Finnegans Wake -- Autopoietic Baroque Energies: Finnegans Wake -- Folding Blanchot onto Pynchon: Enlightenment Reason, the Global Technical System, and World Citizenship -- Catastrophe, Allegory, and the Philosophical Baroque: A Quartet of Benjamin-Lacan and Joyce-Pynchon -- Conclusions -- Select Bibliography -- Index of Premodern and Modern Authors -- Index of Sources -- Index of Names and Subjects.

Sommario/riassunto

In his pioneering study The Philosophical Baroque: On Autopoietic Modernities , Erik S. Roraback argues that modern culture,



contemplated over its four-century history, resembles nothing so much as the pearl famously described, by periodizers of old, as irregular, barroco . Reframing modernity as a multi-century baroque, Roraback steeps texts by Shakespeare, Henry James, Joyce, and Pynchon in systems theory and the ideas of philosophers of language and culture from Leibniz to such dynamic contemporaries as Luhmann, Benjamin, Blanchot, Deleuze and Guattari, Lacan, and Žižek. The resulting brew, high in intellectual caffeine, will be of value to all who take an interest in cultural modernity—indeed, all who recognize that “modernity” was (and remains) a congeries of competing aesthetic, economic, historical, ideological, philosophical, and political energies